Thinking 10 yards, slow fire with an off the shelf center-fire handgun. Two inch groups, one inch groups?

Sniper03

05-05-2011 07:21 PM

Egghead,

My thoughts would be it would depend upon the experience the shooter had. And the familiarity with the weapon. A new shooter probably would be good doing 3" groups a 10 yards while someone with a lot of practice and experience maybe 2". The match shooter who has been developing his skill for some years and the gifted shooter with practice and experience possibly 1". But I would say with in a 2" group would be the normal for a good shooter that is not a Master. Then again for most people the caliber would have a bearing on it also basing it on recoil and etc.

03

wb_carpenter

05-05-2011 07:24 PM

Hard to say I personally could keep 3-5 shots inside 2" but outside 1" with my M&P9 compact if I really take my time.

With a .22 its a bit easier.

I am no expert but a decent shooter.

General_lee

05-05-2011 07:25 PM

I consider good shooting to be hitting what I aim at. :D

egghead

05-05-2011 07:51 PM

I'm pleased when I see a hole in the target, but I was wondering what most experienced shooters would consider solid.

danf_fl

05-05-2011 08:26 PM

Depending on which handgun I am using.
One will put 5 rounds of .45 touching each other at 15 yards.
Another will put 5 rounds of 9mm within 4" of each other at 15 yards.

Both are acceptable to me. So which is the best group?

WDB

05-06-2011 02:55 AM

Three or four inch groups at 30' is a pretty good shooter at slow fire. Two inch groups is a person who has training/practices often. One inch groups is competition shooter.

yellowhand

05-06-2011 03:12 AM

4 inch hole at 15 yards

Cut a hole 4 inches in diameter into your target center mass, set target at 15 yards, and slap yourself upside the head each time you shoot and see a smaller hole anywhere on your target smaller than four inches.:D

For real, cutting a hole in your target and shooting thru the hole will get you off the idea of placing each round on top on one another.

As you get better, make the hole an inch smaller, move the target stand near and far, known and unknown distances, sideways on to where you're standing,etc.